700+sf in finished basement, not included in living sf.(Plumbed for 2nd BATH). Finished 1 Car Garage. Add Baseboard heating and use as office. GREAT HOME, LOCATION, and PROPERTY FOR RENT OR LIVING!

Look familiar?

It should! It’s the house that was featured in the last post on Burbed in 2007.

Apparently, it’s still ready for move in! Except now you can also rent it. Unfortunately, the rental cost isn’t posted, but assuming a 90% LTV ARM, that would be $3000 for the mortgage payments alone! But isn’t the going rental cost of a SFH in Mountain View about $2500 a month?

So… would you rent this for $2500? Maybe. After all, it is Mountain View – free wifi and all. But wouldn’t you feel better about owning it and paying $3000 + property tax and more? Don’t forget about the income tax break you would get from paying that mortgage.

I don’t know what’s wrong with kids these days. Why won’t they man up and just buy this house already?

When 75-year-old Naomi Silverstein climbed out of bed late one night last October, she was shocked that she stepped into raw sewage.

A city sewer had backed up, and flooded her home with sludge, she said. The damage was so great that all the floors had to be replaced and walls repainted.

Her home was repaired in December, but it happened again one month later. She was standing in the shower when she heard the sewage burbling through her pipes. She ran through the house, ready to gather towels to protect her new floors. Then she looked out her window: Excrement was floating in her flooded yard.

Silverstein filed a claim this spring with the city of San Mateo to reimburse her cleanup expenses. She said she the flooding was caused by the city’s broken sewage main lines near her home on Gillis Drive. City officials rejected the claim, saying the problem was on her end. But she argues none of it would ever have happened had the city’s sewer line not flooded during the rains, and she has now filed a lawsuit against the city. In the meantime, she has taken a part-time job as an office assistant to make ends meet.

[snip]
» 20 to 25 per year: Claims received by the city about sewage backups into homes

» 30 to 40: Percent of those claims where the city accepts responsibility

» 236: Miles of sewers in San Mateo

» $2 million to $2.5 million: Amount devoted to maintaining the lines annually

» 37 million: Total cost of recommended sewer fixes

» $12 million: Amount the city is planning to spend on priority fixes

Source: City of San Mateo

Burbed reader Madhaus submitted this find. I figured it would be a good way to start off the week. This, to me, is an example of why we need to support Prop 13 more than ever. If it weren’t for Prop 13, many of these homeowners would be drowning in high property tax, and would be unable to afford paying to clean up these bursting sewage pipes. How awful would that be!

So keep on Supporting Prop 13, Californians. Otherwise, people will be unable to afford to fix problems caused by decaying infrastructure.

Thanks to Burbed reader Madhaus for this find. We all know that the Bay Area is incredibly unique in that it is full of micromarkets. One neighborhood might be doing super well, but it’s neighbor might not be. Now, it is down to a house by house basis!

What’s unfortunate is that the person who writes the blog that this links to is in SoCal, and those people simply don’t understand how things work around here.

June 20, 2008

The previous commenter seems awfully bitter and should probably move elsewhere if he hates it here so much. Like “Been there done that”, I appreciate the Bay Area for the great outdoors, mild weather, diversity and culture. Try living anywhere else after living here, and you’ll either regret it or miss certain things. I know someone who decided to “cash out” of their big Marin home last year and move near his wife’s family (in Ohio) in order to gain a “simpler lifestyle”. And guess what? Within six months, he was back. Another friend moved to Colorado a few months ago, just outside of Boulder (because keep in mind, Boulder is now just as expensive as it is here, so it’s hard to get IN to Boulder). She absolutely hates it; says there’s no culture (restaurants close by 8pm there!) and the weather is too harsh. So don’t take the Bay Area for granted, because it truly IS “special”.

Well – now that certainly sounds like a challenge to me. Let’s take a look and see if this is true. For a compare and contrast, let’s use this modest Real Bay Area house featured earlier as a starting point…

I knew it! Thank god! Boulder housing is absolutely dirt cheap! Look at the monstrosity. Why would you want to live there? It’s insane! You’d go broke furnishing it. Better all getting a smaller house so you don’t need to buy as many Wifi repeaters!

Sorry Target-Addict, I know you meant well, but really, you should have used an example like Paris, London, Manhattan, Russia, or Tokyo when comparing to Cupertino and San Jose.

Sellers and buyers are striking as many deals now as they did in 2005 at the height of the boom, according to data from local brokerages, and the number of homes for sale in the county has been falling steadily – not at all typical for this time of year.

Real estate information firm DataQuick Information Systems reported Wednesday that the sales of 1,040 previously owned single-family houses closed escrow in Santa Clara County last month, up from 924 in April, but down 27 percent from May 2007. And the median price paid for those houses was $696,500, down 12.3 percent from $793,750 a year earlier.

The figures will strike some homeowners – loath to see their property values fall – as somber. The bright side is that the Silicon Valley market has sped up recently. More houses are selling, and the supply of homes on the market is falling.

“Were getting more consumers putting deals together,” said Dave Walsh, president of the Santa Clara County Association of Realtors.

[snip]

Howard Bloom, an agent with Intero Real Estate, said he recently listed a fourplex in San Jose’s Berryessa neighborhood, a bank-owned foreclosure priced at $759,000. The property got more than 12 offers and will sell for about $100,000 over its list price, he said. “It was a pretty attractive price. The phone was ringing off the wall,” he said.

The bust is OVER.

Spring Bounce worked!

Silicon Valley is back and on track! Is it no surprise? After all, Apple’s introducing iPhone 3G, Yahoo struck a deal with Google, and LinkedIn is now valued at $1billion.

Now, let’s be clear, things aren’t perfect – we might not return to our god given 15% YoY appreciation just yet – but I think we have a good shot at something reasonable like 8%.

At some houses you get a free week of condo in Maui. But what if you wanted to live on the beach and enjoy the sunrise and sunset forever?

Introducing 651 Port Drive #306. This highly personalized and distinctive address alone assures you that when you plunk down $399k for this condo, you know you’re set for a lifetime of sunrises, sunsets, and your own personal beach. Things the Bay Area is famous for. It’s like living in Maui, but with easy access to Highway 92.

Let’s now take a look at the other, unretouched photos of this paradise property:

Are you sold on this dream yet? Think: sunrise, sunset, private beaches. Oh yeah!

Blue bars on the chart represent the recast schedule if all the loans were to recast five years after origination date. Gray bars represent the expected schedule of option ARM resets, which show loans recasting sooner after hitting the principal cap. Credit Suisse

Thanks to Burbed reader Madhaus for this submission.

The premise of this piece is that the ARM reset problem is going to surge as property prices decline, and minimum payments rise, both conspiring to drive more houses underwater, and thus triggering ARMs to reset.

Is that really the case though in the Bay Area? As we’ve heard, people who bought houses in the end of 2006 actually saw appreciation (condos… not so much… but may next year.) That and FaceBook is going to pop at any moment – flooding the Valley with thousands more millionaires. Also, soon we’ll be heading into Fall – and Fall bounce can be pretty strong!

Best of both worlds. This family home has been completely refreshed, while retaining its original charm. Four spacious bedrooms including the private master suite,plus an abundance of closets. 2 full baths., formal DR. Fully remodeled kitchen and sunny breakfast bar. Pool & spa, lg, 2 car garage and storgage.

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The posts on this weblog are provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confer no rights. The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and only represent the view of Burbed.com's editor. Comments are the views of commenters, not Burbed. If companies, properties, etc are mentioned on this blog, you should assume that I have a financial stake in them. Trust no one.